Another option is to use SW instead of FW for your top offs. That should bring it up without having to do huge water changes.
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Great idea I will do that today..Another option is to use SW instead of FW for your top offs. That should bring it up without having to do huge water changes.
I always have kept my calcium at 440-450 and mag @1400 or so.. I'm not dosing mag.
Not a bad idea.. 125 is plenty of room for some discus..I tend to enjoy the corals, as that it what makes SW worth the effort.
If it was fish only I may as well just run freshwater
6 months
I have seen people set up brand new tanks and drop sps in and it looks wonderful.That could be a part of your issue
I have seen people set up brand new tanks and drop sps in and it looks wonderful.
I don't know I have spent over a month dialing in the dosing pump.. those are the levels that keep the Cal and Alk where they are.. but I'll shut it off..2 part is made to dose in equal parts. If you are dosing 50ml of alk you should be dosing 50 of cal. Since you arent something is off with your parameters. My suggestion would be to test your newly mixed saltwater, then try and keep you numbers at that level. So if your saltwater tests at 7.5 alk and 420 cal maintain that in your tank. This way when you do water changes its always stable. When you do it this way you will then add equal amounts of alk and cal because corals consume the 2 part at the same rate. The chemist on these forums ( Farley) has a lot of great write ups on this. Also when you test the new saltwater make sure its at 35 ppt (1.026) . Lower or higher will change the numbers drastically. As young as your tank is 50 ml seems like a lot (but not unheard of). My tank is a 120, been up for about a year, 4 Lps full colonies and sbout 15 SPS frags and I am set at 38 ml per day equal.